The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 45, No. 137, Ed. 1 Monday, August 10, 1936 Page: 4 of 6
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J
I
FOUR
EL RENO (OKLA.) DAILY TRIBUNE
T!*£ iMSe,"e! FOGS CHARTED TO
DIVIDED THEY FALL
Issued dally except Saturday from 207 South Rock Island’avenue,
entered as second-class mall matter under the act of March 3, 1679.
budge harm;
News Editor
RAY J. DYER
Editor and Publisher
DEAN WARD
Advertising Manager
.T1' ASSOCIATED PRESS is exclusively entitled to the use for re-
VUDllcatioii of all the news dispatches credited to It or not credited by
Ills paper, and also to all the local news therein.
All rights of publication of special dispatches herein are also reserved
Stud y Planned To Aid
Ocean Flying:
MEMBER OF THE NATIONAL EDITORIAL ASSOCIATION
and
THE OKLAHOMA PRESS ASSOCIATION
National Advertising Representatives
FROST. LINDIS & KOIIN
New York. Chicago, Detroit, St. Louis, Dallas,
Atlanta, San Francisco
MONTREAL —(u.R) —Canadian.
Erltlsh and Newfoundland aviation
authorities are pursuing a “safety
first” policy in preparing for the
first North Atlantic air mail ser-
vice across Newfoundland and
Canada to Montreal.
Fog is the great enemy in the
j Newfoundland area, and the Brit-
ish Air Ministry, Canadian and
■ Imperial Airways are all cnoperat-
[ ing in the preliminary work of
nifM month. ---------*-— ---------IIJi studying atmospheric condition
fhree months--------$1.35 Six months----------12 BO over the mouth of the St Law-
-------io.40 One year --------------14.00 renee river and 011 the roast and
inland districts of Newfoundland
V V
* Bx
&
.
■
Vii?.
DAILY SUBSCRIPTION RATES BY MAIL IN CANADIAN AND
Carrier ADJOINING COUNTIES
i»ie week-------------0 .12 Three months ______
One year _______
MONDAY, AUGUST 10, I93«
Gl ARD AVEI.L YOUR LIPS: For he (hat will love life, and see
good days, let him refrain his tongue from evil, and his lips lhat
they speak no guile.—I Peter 3:10.
NEW YORK . Inside Out
BY DON O’MAIXET
Study Begun In 1934
Pilots and meteorologists have
been stationed In Newfoundland
since the autumn of 1934, investi-
gating conditions I11 the upper at-
mosphere. Although ground data
were available, there was no ade-
quate Information on upper-air
1 movements such as will be re-
j quired lor the experimental Brlt-
! ain-to-Cnnada flights by Imperial
I Airways long-range living hone,
and the composite craft In which I
a long-range seaplane will be I
launched In midair from the wing J
of a living boat.
A Canadian government me-
teorologist is in charge of upper
Mi
HOLLYWOOD
FILM SHOP
\
MEW YORK. August 10—About 1 would arrive, and Dr Rotholz tiped
*’•sundown every day. along no longer worry about his shatter-
bustling Gerard avenue in the ed fortunes.
Bronx, the slightly pensive figure * * *
of Dr. Ralph Rotholz could be seen SLEEP—That night Dr Rotholz’s
—up to a few weeks ago—strolling 1 insomnia was unusually severe But ' 'lr ol)M'rvnl,ons 0VPI' the 81 Law-
slowlv from his home to Abraham the next morning he nevertheless ro.nce !,nd _two Imperial Airways
Snltofskv's drug store on the cor- arose apparently In Jovial spirits,
ner of 166th street. Announcing to his sister that he
In this strange land, where was going to make a phone call,
relative? had sheltered him five hr strolled through the quiet Sun-
day air to Snltofsky's store.
There die doctor stepped back in-
to the prescription room, and once
more (here were words of congratu-
lation. Snitofsk.v gas speaking op-
timistically of the future, when
n customer entered. The druggist
months before, following his flight
from »he persecutions of his native
Germany, the 39-year-old physician
had lound a sympathetic friend
behind the familiar-smelling bot-
tles on the front counter. He liked
to sit in the back prescription
room and ehat with his friend excused himself and went out front,
about life, about medicine and the It was a routine sale, and a few
ills—both moral and physical—of minutes later he returned to the
the human race. j buck room.
8nitofsky had listened under-, The sight that met his eyes made
standingly to Dr Rotholz's tale . j Snitofsk.v turn ashen white. Slump-
In Berlin the Jewish physiciand aaalnst the prescription coun-
had won a respected place for l,r • a large bottle of poison cluteh-
himself after years of study and
labor. He had attended the school
in the city of his birth. He had
applied himself diligently nt med-
ical college. Talented and like-
nble. he had finally opened his
office, and In the ensuing twelve
years nnd built up a successful
practice winning the love and ron-
fidenc- of all his patients
ft* in one hand, was Dr. Rot hobs
convulsed body. Snitofsky. after a
moment’s shock, acted with light-
nlng rapidity. He carried the still-
conscious body to a rab. drove
frrntlcally to Morrlsanln hospital
two blocks- awav. nnd rushed hts
burden into the emergency ward
The hospital physician shook his
head. Dr. Rotholz was dead—re-
pilots are flying the planes front
which observations are made. The
pilots are Capts D. C Fraser and
C S. Kent
The Newfoundland authorities
have established 21 fog-reporllng
stations Inland and coastal. Ob-
servations firm these stations in-
dicate that while difficult flying
conditions persist a round St.
John's, there Is a central area
which might be described as fog-
tree. a snot In this zone may be
chosen as the Atlantic route front
England to Montreal
Fliers Know Locality
Fraser a native of Newfound-
land. flew extensively there be-
lorp Joining Imperial Airways HI:
eollengue Kent, has had long ex-
l*erlence of rommereinl aviation
dating from the early days of the
Continental services from Britain
He has also had experience of
ground organization He tins I tad
Dlenty of opportunity of studying
the route to Montreal.
HOLLYWOOD, Aug. 10.—(U.R)—
r,le public never forgets a good
performance, it’s the producers
who forget” says Eddie Quillan,
the little Scottish lad who unof-
fieially stole “Mutiny on the Boun-
ty’ from its featured" stars.
’We’re still getting letters front
fans to prove it," Eddie said,
"Papa will show them to you."
Papa Joseph Quillan produced a
iiuge box of letters and commend-
atory comment of movie critics
hut since the Quillans were being
Interviewed In a closed automo-
bile with the sun beating down
on It at a 90-degree clip, he was
discouraged from reading all of
them.
MONDAY, AUGUST 10, 193(
PRINCE OF SULU H
El
Acts More Like An Amer-‘
ican Congressman
\
V
V,!
'Producers have a peculiar sys-
tem," Eddie said. "For Instance,
an actor does a good Job and the
public likes it. The producer is
liable to w'ait a year or so before
giving the actor another chance In
a good role. Then, because the
actor hasn't done anything lately
they won’t put him in it. In other
words, they don’t give him work*,
then won’t give him work because
he hasn’t been working "
Currently, the live-teet-four-
inch reformed comedian is making
a racing picture taken from the
life of Ted 81oan. famous jockey,
and Is afraid the horses will steal
the picture.
Naturally, in filming a racing
picture there has got to be a lot
of racing." Eddie said. ’Conse-
quently, actors play second fiddle
to the fillies and don’t have an
opportunity for heavy acting.
"Animals get too much credit
anyhow. Let me tell you a story
I was making a nictm-w at vto-i.
making a picture at Mack
Scnnett’s years ago. The director
tried all day to get a dog to per-
form a trick. Twenty-seven shots
MANILA, —(U.R) Datu Ombra.a
member of the National Assembly,
but also husband and royal consort
of Princess Dayans Dayang, acting
Sultan of Sulu. displays more of
the characteristics of an American
congressman than those of an aspir-
ant to a throne.
Immediately upon hts arrival
here from Jolo. capital of the Prov-
ince of Sulu, which he represents in
the National Assembly, Datu Ombra.
I lute ad of making any pretensions
to one day sitting by the side of lus
royal wife on the throne of Sulu
filed lOcppropriatlon bills for public t
works in the Province of Sulu.
These bills, totaling about $100,-1
000. called for about everythng from:
wharves, roadways, a monument to I
Jcse Rlzal, Father of Philippine
Independence, schools, ranging
from emergency and primary ones'
to high schools, a complete radio J
station and everything else that the
Province of Sulu needs.
After first doing his duty thus to
his constituents, Datu Ombra took
time off to satisfy a little the na-
tural curiosity of his colleagues and
the press about the real status of
the affairs of the acting Sultan of
Sulu, his wife.
"The Sultanate (or succession of
Sulu) is a dead Issue," he declared,
"and peace reigns all over the prov-
ince. There Is no law or tradition
to bar Princess Dayang Dayang
from occupying the throne since
the death of her uncle, the late Sul-
tan Jr.malulu Kiram. Likewise, the
Princess has the support of the
great majority of the Suluanos
do**11 "'’when^Sennett* saw Ab0Ut tl:e 01lly Question which
MihhnH s??..■5fn22Lii he Ombra refused to answer was
Jig*.
whether he Z*V’SSd
STATEHOUSE
GOSSIP
SKY GIRL
BY ( IIARI.ES C. HASLET
(OKLAHOMA CITY Aug 10._<A>i
—Hnnkesmen ror Governor
administration
By NELLY GRAF
was
as- .*-r -tf-s=se-St jzajsrs £
jKLSfS1^“isna ss XtiSETmF-
' Eddie’s a good bU he t^ii^me Inst,(>ad'he made it clear that like
I can keen hR monev Mtae * real con«raB8Inan he will remain
he ean-^ons ders he ^7v™rol al ManlIa as lon« “ National
the passage of his appropriation
bills for the improvements which he
The studio gave him no pub- hi I I
Helty at eU.” said the elder Quil- f hto province ngcd.v
Then, one dav strange uniforms mov,‘d forever, far from the perse-
suddenly appeared in the MrgeU. i Jife"”1* wh,rh *“<1 destroyed his
■tern decrees came from the gov- ______
Elinor Ames tries to escape
the heartbreak of her postponed
Elinor explained, "just behind and
a little to the right."
. BHH ’’Great guns," Jack groaned “is
governor to the by becoming an air stewardess, the pilot crazy? Is he trvino m
<>n will not be as Dr. Rogers' mother approves an
Ian "and it was only after critics t , o. • « i .
praised him that theatres men- Lake Ship, Sunk In 95,
tioned him In advertising the pic-
ture. They tested actors for
months for the role—that of a
,\oun« married man shanghaied 80UTH HAVEN. Mich. (U.R)—
May Be Ixieated Soon
Public Records
eminent of Nazis. Patients be-
gan fearfully to avoid Dr R<>-
tholz’s office. He hlm.self soon
found it dangerous to cross his
own street. The pressure grew
worse; poverty loomed.
Rr, Rotholz at last Alairiiixr Licenses
American relatives offered liim a Harold !,. Bortell. 23. of Pocasset.
refuge He fled to a new land. 'i*nd Hnzle MrComis. 18. of Min-
• • * jeo.
• A(.l R had foil
"r=” “*
addition ag the "new deal" emer-1 alliance between Norman and The words died on his iips The
gency proposals he placed before! wealthy Francinr Bay less. Nor- other ship was cruising alongside
Hie last session. man is jealous of Jack Newton, on the right now. its nose even
In 193A Marland asked the leg- !*“' ?iL0‘1wh1° J'e,prd fiJinor «*♦ with their own liner. The noise
islaiors lo create numerous new Ro«<;.r? Norman * was deafening,
boards and commlaslons and ap- _bV‘ yelled the co-
million
section, the ground organization is
bring prepared lor the Trars-Cnn-
ada airway wlilch after malls
from Britain have reached Mont-
real. will carry them by day- nnd-
• tv lee lo Winnipeg and,
Vancouver a further link In the i Dropriato several
air-mail chain will be from Mon!
real to New York
away from his wife and baby on plan* are underway to search for
Captain Bligh's boat—and didn't the s,l*P Chicora. which sank with
offer the role to Eddie until two 24 Persons in a storm oer Lake
weeks oefore shooting started." Michigan on Jan. 31. 1895.
Eddie lias been acting since T*16 water-soaked hulk has been
lie was 7. going on the stage with reP°rted seen several times by
his parents and eight brothers and alrPlane pilots. Allan Chesebro.
sisters. He made comedies for the under whose directiou the search
screen starting with Mack Sennett wl11 b* made, said that an air-
in 1925.
of relatives. He learned English oliahomi cuv °f
at a tremendous rate. He prodded _ oma C,l>
his druggist-friend with question Elovd W Carter 41 nnd Beulah
after question about medical cm- Mon,ee 28 both of Oklahoma
toms in America. And he listened. C,,y
too—picking up eagerly every scrap James O Stevenson. 28 of
l-CM AI BRIEFS
Mrs. William Graham tr.. of
Kilgore Tex. is visiting her staler.
Miss Daisy Wilson. 202 South
Barker avenue.
ijn** »Ha,,a?.! ”“d «*"" “»d »>-•-«>’ settlement1"filed
severity ever since his fll-jht district court
from Germany. .. .
j jjnZTD M
Ills prophecy was borne out, Dr.
lee Bry-
deeree of dl-
a minor clillci
ti
F.I
Reno resident, has a "rented a
postman's position In Oklahoma
City.
- - ---- — Earl Rntrekln of Oklahoma Cltv
of infonnatlon which the druggist Washington. D. C. nnd Marguerite son of Mrs. M L Simmons i"21
cotud impart Iobaln. 25. of Bristow | Fast Oak slreel and former
yWrsraiK sT'aS. sa«v '
to practice medicine here. While [21. of Okmulgee,
a™ "il the rP8,"!f: *2 would Eugene K Berber!. 21 and
fh^n hif"!8“isp Jlth Snitofsk.v Katherine P Harris. 18. both of
about his chances of passing. He Oklahoma Cltv.
seemed In great spirits. The only Divorrr Suit
Ihkv that bothered him was re- Etta M Bryant v* H
current attacks of Insomnia He ;,nt Petition for
had always been subject to this • orre custody of
dolla's
for their upkeep. The senate
passed most of his bills, but the
house, under eadership of I^on C
Phillips, speaker, srrapped some
of the program nnd modified tlir f
remainder. (
"Turn left and put
Willie It Is several months yet [
before ’tie next- session convenes
and a genera! election still Inter-
venes It appears from tilts dis-
tance that tlie senate again will
la- friendly to Marland and the
house will scrutinize rlosely any
has quarreled with him. leola pilot,
disappears, but wires Elinor a speed."
mysterious message not to fly Jack was already doing Just
again until she has seen her. A that, but the other plane followed
few days later. Elinor read* a hovering as close as It dared.
"Whoever that pilot is he seems
bent on committing suicide and
murder.” the co-pilot groaned
Jack made a sudden turn anc*
deftly zoomed uhead of the sha-
dowing plane in a burst of speed
"Whew!" The co-pilot wiped his
forehead ‘'Let's make for the next
landing. Jack I’m losing my grip."
After a moment of tense silence.
newspaper account of Norman’s
betrothal to Francine Basics*.
She Iraves on her regular flight
A foreigner V'aldmirr. is aboard.
He carefully guard* two small
green hags and goes into a frenzy
of anxiety when the plane runa
into a lightning storm.
Duily I a‘s.son
In English
plane will be used in an effort to
locate the ship, believed lying in
about 80 feet of water, three miles
west of here.
The Chicora carried a cargo of
30 carloads of flour and money
estimated to have amounted to
about *30 000.
WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Do
not say. “I shall be glad to ac-
cept of vour hospitality." Omit of.
Miss Ixrls Stafford, who has
been seriously 111 since March and
rnnfmmt #4V / 'vl- 1.. t. i. _
confined lo' an Oklahoma City hos-
pital the past eight weeks is re-
ported unimproved
8mlth.
Rotholz learned one Saturday that
he had passed Enthusiastically
Bnltofsky congratulated him upon
hi* becoming g fuli-fieaged Ameri-
can physician.
In a month the official diploma
AA'arranty Deeds
Harvey C. Dozier and wife to
E. O Courtney and wife. ix>t j,
block 4. Hlllcrest addition to El
Reno
Mary Mae MrKissack
Ieske NW 3S-!2n-7w
Row
MEMORY LANE
Jack Myers and Bob Mallonee
lilan to leave Tuesday for Black-
well to visit until Friday with the
latter’s grandparents Mr nnd Mr:
I Ramsbarger
CHAPTER Vin ____
Sur i
Senator Al Nichols. Wewoka. an permit herself to show It. The plane again. Roll your window
pa rent lv lias enough votes lo mak-- plane lurched crazily. down Grimes," he said to the co-
him^dent^ro^mporoof the A„ the by nQW Jgt “Beckon to them to dear the
administration. had caught the realization of
Speaker Phillips, arch politics' danger. Women began to sob (JRIMES did as he was instruct-
lo< of Marland In the last session and some of the men moved Phot In the other
claims he has enough support to about uneasilv S"'1? * d n£l or would not ^ “
re-elect 1dm as speaker Bui ^ M kept on flying alongside, dan-
friends of the administration in The man in the front seat, whose ecrously near,
the house challenge the rlalm an#t name was Bailey, arose and came “The fellow is Just plain crazy!”
nave put forth J t Daniel a* back 10 Ellnor- who balanced ber- . “Go back to the cabin. Elinor.”
their candidate self as the ship banked. Jack said tensely.
* * g, "We are not tn danger." Re B,lnor whoae face was
School legislation may be an Im- spoke toud <“n?l;8h tor **» other SfSPS"»th* P*°« {* **>• <»-
porta nt lvsue m the ner, JLPassengers to hear ”T’»e been in *.*Jndo^' ?«pamed: "Jack
Mr and Mrs W Arthur Blggert.
Mrs L*Ona Boardmsn and B T
Conwav visited Sunday night
with friends In Yukon
Already W V'Barry T<Sah ^ ^ a" Now- »f l{lat 8h^lt look^il ^
nominee for senatehasss^Ttle ovcryonewill Just buck up well be ^Vh^r0" remPmb"r the °nP
.me“ndmentP m ^
L. C Dunngan, 209 1-2 8outh
Bickford avenue has returned
from Hobart, frhere he served
lwo weeks as relief manager of
the Burr store
x. . „ Aur. 10. l»21
sr»J?w3!ars&j- ...................
Walter Oilmore who recently
was transferred to Chlcknshn as
as malinger oi the market In Allison’s
grocery, spent Sunday with rela-
tives here
A new fliitoniohilo xeene- *■ '
Walker has been formed for the .bstribntion of Dodge Bro-
thers cars in this territory .... The Dodge salesrooms w ill
bo located at 202 South Rock Island
u ”r- an<!,Mr"’ F- A Waldo returned Monday from six
weeks vacation spent in various cities in the east.
Mr. and Mrs H T. Hawkins and
daughter. Billy Jean, have returned
from Dnlhart Tex . nnd Bre located
temporarily at 414 North Rock
Island avenue.
trJhZ F,T”,r........ " "» w«k with
Mrs. Dn\’e Emmons returned yesterday from Rnah
Sprinifu where .he h„ vi,ltl„c h" me‘her h
Mr. ...... U - .......... tfc. H„me ..r
m^^^.SSoSS^,h"
ss:
wh.r?,tyK^Pe
cajro.
Miss Lucile Rulter left Monday to spend a
week in Chi-
Mr* Cecil Aber was moved to
her home, 301 North Choctaw ave-
nue Sunday from an Oklahoma
City hospital, where she recently
underwent a major operation.
Miss Geneva Hunnlrutt. 1217
West tendon street, resumed du-
ties at Kelso'* department store
Monday following two weeks' va-
cation.
Mrs. Mnrle Mnthews nnd daugh-
ter. Mis* Dorothy, of Ok'nhoma
ntv. spent the week-end with the
former’s sister Mrs Nelli B Waldo
nnd Mr Waldo. 8lo South Ma-
comb avenue.
Father Gradv of Clinton visited
Monday with Mi and Mrs Rov H
Cochrane. 216 North Rock Island
nvemie. while rnroute to oklnhomn
A Problem A Day
one
of the
Mow enn n 40-ft rod be rut Into
two neettnn* no that 1-2 of
Piece Is ns long ns 1-8
other?
Answer to Sunday's Problem
", i -2 miles Rxntanstlon—Mul
Uply go by 3-g; divlils »»y 4.5.
place the schools on a statewide
Jinancing basis
"And Daniel proposes to shear
the state board of education of
some of Us nower of control over
local school boards.
"I do not see why the state
board of education can tell us
lhat wc can’t have a hlghsrhool
unless we have 40 pupils In It."
said Daniel.
While the fifteenth legislature
appropriated *8200.000 for pri-
mary and secondary aid to com-
mon schools, the appropriation will
expire In nbout another year and
Barry believes a constitutional
amendment is neeeasary to make
the state financing permanent.
HI* plan I* to have the leglsln-
ture submit the amendment to
the people
* * *
If Sneaker Phillips Is re-eleetcd
he will break n precedent in the
house -holding the presiding chnli
for two regular terms In succes-
sion.
The attempts to organise house
nnd senate Immediately after the
run-off primary In the earliest the
the task hns been undertaken in
many years. Of course the gen-
eral election must be considered
but In obtaining pledges Phillip*
nnd Nichols have taken Into con-
sideration counties where Repub-
licans mny be elected over the
Democrats
* * *
Phltllps expects to carry on hi*
so-called "economy" program which
he started In the fifteenth session
when he declared In answer to
Marland* nleas that "necessities
mu*t be taken care of before the
frills"
Wc must curb the waste in
government." said Phillips
He has attacked the number of
employes on the tax commission
payroll, declared the governor's
state planning board "absolutely
uselesa" and has defended his po-
sition that the appropriation* for
thg state consarvatioa oonunUskm
telling a good Grimes!” He peered out. “It looks
loke?” Bailey whacked him on the l)ke that ship all right. What the
"How about
back.
Valdmlrz huddled deeper Into pound7ngS on^^r^He"
hi« spat “Don't know anv *• ruun®,n» on me aoor. He opened
s?cisirtoi,“r.s•o‘“' 'm;“s*.««;«•
Elinor glanced back into the fog. Sk./ shmr’ n
but it was not the fog blanket if. i?_a.n lcrcaFled
which held her eye. made her jt Hurry I Thc^ s°bi#-nWa.y ilolf
hnriHcr with n.u, !r «lRry' mere s been a leak
ssraawM k
distance behind them and a little Th. *—at-Y?,d?..r?
m th». rich, Th. Hoi.,, n, .nn.ho- .. . oinct passengers were hud-
to the right The lights of another gkg in their spats Wnm.n ..r.
plane It was flying faster than " th. n
8h,p *nd Baln,n« rvfry ssfetjr fclt* with shaking h^nds
,,o.. . Bailey was the only passenger
. VaWinlnt stiffened, gasped au- who remained calm. He assisted
«Wjfv Whnts that flyer trying to Jack In forcing the fear - crazed
d®f {}e muttered "Crash into our Valdniirz back to his seat. Elinor
sh),P? administered aromatic ammonia.
Of course not. Elinor an- but she kept glancing out at the
<wered with a cheerfulness she did plane flying so close through the
not feel. "That * probably a Oov- storm, which seemed to bn getting
erment plane oil its course, trying worse
'° get it* bearings by trailing us." As she watched, fascinated she
‘Jt I"*11 a Government plane.” noticed the emergency hatch of
Bailey remarked "It isn’t the right the silver plane lift slowly—that
color. Looks as though it might be large glass opening above the pilot
nrivatcly owned " seat. A figure emerged—a slight
figure. It crawled cautiously onto
I7LINOR pressed the pilot’s *lg- the wing and rested
nal Immediately her signal BHnor could neither speak nor
flashed summoning her lo the ®°*9l
•)llot’s compartment She hurried —;-
a ward (To be continued>
•What ’S rout trouble?” Jack onaP«'V«,^,h8,nd“.,V ,
isked IThe characters tn this story art
"A ship has Ocen foliowina us *f fictitious l
FLIES MILLION MILES
_______ ST IX3UIS (UP' C B McMa-
OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: ban. superintendent of aerial pa-
Chimericul Pronounce kl-mer-i- trol and trnns]Mrtalion for the
kal. both is as in it. e as in me. Mississippi River Fuel Corps., a
a unstressed, accent second sylln- former war pilot, recently com-
ble. _ pleted his millionth mile of aerial
OFTEN MISSPELLED: Corre-!survey between 8t. Louis and Mon-
•s|x>ndent (two r’s); one with whom roe’ Ia. He spent approximately
intercourse carried on by letters. 10.350 hours In the air.
Corespondent tone r); a Joint re- —------
.-.pendent, as In a divorce suit. SCOTCH MUSIC IRKS HENS
SYNONYMS: Justice. Justness VANCOUVER. B C —<U*)—8coteh
*wSmmusic and egg hatching do not
WORD STUDY: Use a word mix. A local Italian is demand-
three times and it Is yours" Let | ins damages from his 8cotch
u* increase our vocabulary by mas- neighbor on the grounds that ev-
tering one word each day. Today’s ety time the latter started plav-
word: PLATONIC purely spirit- ing his bagpipes, all the Italian’s
ual; having no passion: said of brooding hens’took fright, flew off
love. “Their friendship was pure- their nests and the eggs never
!y platonic In nature." i did hatch.
YOUR GOOD HEALTH
Recent Scientific Report. Say Heterophile Antifg
Gives Immunity to Cold*
(J* HR6T 'SJSWP ™R,SMAN M D
the question of the common
colds in summertime does not
seem so very appropriate. Yet it is.
Winter is the time we associate
with colds. Hot
weather, free
P e r s p I ration.
should have been for a period oi "For one thing we Young Turk*
one year only.
* * *
Just whether Marland has been
weakened with tire next legislature
by his failure to win the Demo-
cratic nomination for V. 8. senate
remains to be seen. Speaker
Phillips has set at rest all fears
of observer* that there might be
an attempted move to impeach.
But despite Marland’* unsuccess-
ful attempt to win the senate
nomination, his young advisers be-
lieve he will be In as good or bet-
ter position to work with tire legis-
lating than during lire lagt mmcJuu,
know more about what is going
on than we did two years ago,"
said one of his advisers. ”1 be-
lieve the governor will be able to
work with this session."
* * *
A feeling persists among many
employes at the cnpltol that there
will be erveral other changes in
l>crsonnrl following the run-off
Marland already has dismissed two
members of his board of educa-
tion and relieved Major Oeneral
Charles McPIierren of command of
the 45th division of the national
guard.
OK CKBISMAN
sitting under
trie
electric fans,
sleeping in
basements, air-
cooled buildings
and sun-heat«d
out-of-doors are
all factors
which cause
many colds to
develop in sum-
BMr.
The trite say-
ing g well-treated cold lasts three
weeks and an untreated one
twenty-one days" is too true. The
treatment of a cold after it has
developed is not as successful as
we would wish. More effort should
be made at prevention.
We know that a cold follows un-
due exposure, drafts and chilling.
It is caused by bacteria which are
already present in our air tracts.
They are unable to multiply suf-
ficiently to produce cold symp-
toms, until the local reatatance is
lowered by chilling or Irritation.
We know it is caused by bacteria,
but lust whether it is one germ or
a combination of bacteria Is not
known
exact cause of colds, it seems very
probable that a vaccine could be
prepared that would prevent them
Knowing the cause of diphtheria,
we are able to produce Immunity
to that disease. All we have beeq
able to do with our present knowl-
edge of colds has been to prepare
a vaccine from the bacteria that
are found in all colds and thug
hope to strike the right one.
The vaccines aid in building up
the resistance to colds. Injections
of vaccines prepared from influ-
enza bacillus, staphylococrl. strep-
tlcoccl, and pneumococci at
intervals of five days to a week,
gradually Increasing the dosage,
have proven reasonably successful
In a large per cent of persons so
treated. There is no danger tn
their use and persons who catch
cold easily are fully justified In
receiving preventive Injections.
Many physicians have enough
faith in the vaccine* to use them
on themselves.
The effort to produce Immunity
by the use of such preparations by
the mouth have, until lately, not
been successful. The difficulty was
in producing a preparation that
was not neutralised by tho stomach
Juices. Rockwell, VanKlrk and
Powell have been experimenting
f
cent:
oent:
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\ , tiom
ce
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Massif
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It is highly rontagloua. An thro-
MMMfSbi
poid apes are the only animals ex-
oept human beings who catch
coldz. All soo-keeper* doctor the
Monday colds” among the apes,
after the great number oi human
visitors on Saturday and Rundav
Many things enter into the sus-
ceptibility to colds. Each person so
afflicted has hu own favorite
method for catching cold. For
these reasons, methods of preven-
tion vary greatly and are not
^ways scientific. If wt know tho
with heterophile antigen by the
mouth. They published their flnd-
ings sftar two years of experimen-
tation and have shown that tbs
Idea possesses real value. It this
proves true It will be worth fol-
lowing because the antigen can be
taken easily and over a long period
of time.
Bach cold victim should avail
himself of all possible sources of
prevention. Treatment and re-
moval of all local diseases of the
nose and throat should precede all
specific medication. Qood bodily
health Is the best Insurance. New
Is the time to commence building
up resistance to winter weather.
i’)R
mt
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Dyer, Ray J. The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 45, No. 137, Ed. 1 Monday, August 10, 1936, newspaper, August 10, 1936; El Reno, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc919248/m1/4/: accessed May 1, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.